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The most important stories for you to know today
  • City asks for resident input on landslide area
    Two men wearing yellow safety jackets and white helmets walk along a road surrounded by white utility trucks.
    Southern California Edison workers on Exultant Drive in the Seaview neighborhood of Rancho Palos Verdes.

    Topline:

    Rancho Palos Verdes officials are looking to permanently ban new construction in the Portuguese Bend area, where landslides have destroyed hundreds of homes — and threaten many more.

    Why it matters: This isn't the first time the city has looked into a ban. After a 1978 moratorium residents sued, and a judge allowed construction to continue. Today, some of those very same homes are uninhabitable. And many residents are holding out hope for a taxpayer-funded buyout.

    What's next? City officials will share more information about the proposed moratorium and answer resident questions at a town hall Wednesday.

    Read on ... for more about the landslide history and details about the the town hall.

    It looks like Mother Nature will win again in Rancho Palos Verdes.

    City officials are looking to permanently ban new construction in the Portuguese Bend area, where landslides have damaged hundreds of homes — and threaten many more.

    City officials are holding a town hall Wednesday to seek residents’ input. But little will be surprising. After all, we’ve been here before.

    Here’s a brief recap.

    The backstory

    The peninsula is known for its breathtaking views — and an unstable geography that has been shifting and sliding for more than 250,000 years, albeit very, very slowly.

    That didn't matter when the peninsula was largely undeveloped. But, the more aggressive geological movements started after World War II.

    That’s when the peninsula experienced a housing boom and when Los Angeles County attempted to extend Crenshaw Boulevard toward the coastline in 1956.

    The construction contributed to land shifts and fissures that measured around 20 feet in just over six months, from September 1956 to April 1957.

    Still, construction continued.

    Why it matters now

    The next big shift took place nearly 20 years later, when very heavy rains came in 1978. Water-soaked landslides measured about 40 feet a year at one point. The city managed to slow some of it down with wells that pumped water out of the ground and whisked it away.

    Rancho Palos Verdes would ban new construction in 1978. Then, came a lawsuit in 2002 stating that the city had restricted development too much. Although a judge initially ruled in favor of the city, an appeals court overturned the ruling, paving the way for new construction on some empty lots.

    What happens next

    Today, some of those very same homes are uninhabitable.

    The city has also initiated a voluntary property buyout program with federal taxpayer funds, and it plans to tear down some of the damaged homes and restore the land to open space.

    How to weigh in

    City officials will share more information about the proposed moratorium and answer resident questions at a town hall Wednesday.

    The town hall is scheduled for 6 p.m. Wednesday — in person at the Ladera Linda Park Community Center, 32201 Forrestal Drive, Rancho Palos Verdes, and via Zoom

  • How it differs from the traditional 30 year

    Topline:

    Last week, President Donald Trump caused a media frenzy after he floated the idea that the government should back the creation of a 50-year fixed mortgage. Many commenters, including some of Trump's own supporters, hated the idea. They complained that it would result in Americans being in debt for their entire adult lives, essentially renting from a bank. But is a 50-year mortgage really such a crazy idea?

    The 50 vs the 30: Eric Zwick, an economist at The University of Chicago Booth School of Business says a 50 year mortgage is "not obviously so different from a 30-year fixed mortgage." First of all, the reality is most homeowners ditch their mortgage well before its end date. Some refinance. Others move. There are real drawbacks to this sort of financing, including especially a much higher interest bill over the life of the loan and an extended period where homeowners aren't paying down their principal and building equity. But those same issues also arise with the 30-year fixed mortgage, albeit to a lesser degree.

    The cons of long-term fixed mortgages: If the housing market gets dicey and prices start plummeting, having a large outstanding loan at a fixed interest rate can create serious problems. Long-term, fixed-rate mortgages increase the probability that you can go underwater on your home, a situation where you owe more on your house than it's worth. Depending on the state of the economy, the direction of interest rates, and your financial circumstances, it might not make sense to fix your interest rate.

    Last week, President Donald Trump caused a media frenzy after he floated the idea that the government should back the creation of a 50-year fixed mortgage.

    Many commenters, including some of Trump's own supporters, hated the idea. They complained that it would result in Americans being in debt for their entire adult lives, essentially renting from a bank. They complained that this type of mortgage would explode the amount of interest homeowners would have to pay over the lifetime of their loans. They complained that borrowers would be stuck paying interest-only payments for many years and be prevented from actually paying down their principal and building equity in their homes.

    "It will ultimately reward the banks, mortgage lenders, and home builders while people pay far more in interest over time and die before they ever pay off their home," posted Rep. Marjorie Taylor Green (R-Ga.). "In debt forever, in debt for life!"

    President Trump "is creating generational debt," said Josh Johnson on The Daily Show. "They're going to be fighting to get out of grandma's will. Grandkids will be like, 'I barely knew her!'" (Side note: Josh Johnson is very funny. I'm a fan.)

    The uproar over the 50-year mortgage idea reached such a high pitch that apparently the White House was furious with the administration official who pitched President Trump the idea, according to reporting from Politico.

    Sure, it won't solve our housing affordability problem. But is a 50-year mortgage really such a crazy idea?

    "It's not quite as outlandish as it sounds," says John Campbell, an economist at Harvard University.

    "Honestly, I kind of think it's a fine idea," says Eric Zwick, an economist at The University of Chicago Booth School of Business. "It's not obviously so different from a 30-year fixed mortgage."

    The 50 vs The 30

    First of all, the reality is most homeowners ditch their mortgage well before its end date. Some refinance. Others move.

    In America, unlike some other countries, including the UK, you can't take your mortgage with you if you sell your house. So when people sell their house and move, they end their mortgages.

    The typical American homeowner spends less than 12 years in their home, according to a Redfin analysis of the U.S. Census data. That's actually high compared to recent history. Back in the early 2000s, Americans typically spent only about seven years in their houses.

    " Most people will not have that 50-year mortgage product for that length of time," says Daryl Fairweather, the chief economist of Redfin. "I think in a world where this product exists, a lot of people might sign up for it initially and then try to refinance later."

    In other words, the 50-year mortgage would not be a 50-year trap. It would basically serve as another option on the menu for homebuyers looking to finance their homes. And, because you have longer to pay off the loan, it comes with the benefit of having somewhat lower monthly payments. Maybe that could help some secure their dream house or reap the benefits of investing in the housing market.

    "I think affordability is a concern in the housing market," Zwick says. "And one element is the down payment, but another element is the monthly payment. And a longer duration mortgage is gonna lower the monthly payment."

    And, sure, there are real drawbacks to this sort of financing, including especially a much higher interest bill over the life of the loan and an extended period where homeowners aren't paying down their principal and building equity. But those same issues also arise with the 30-year fixed mortgage, albeit to a lesser degree.

    And Americans apparently love the 30-year mortgage. More than 90% of American mortgage holders have one!

    The American mortgage market is weird

    The fact that so many American homeowners have long-term, fixed rate mortgages, and they're able to basically refinance pretty easily whenever they want, makes the U.S. mortgage market pretty weird compared to most other countries.

    We won't get into the complicated history here (we might actually do a Planet Money episode on this history in the future). But, for now, we'll say the 30-year mortgages date back to the Depression era. And they're fundamentally a creature of government intervention. The government-sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac buy mortgages from private lenders, allowing them to offload (and socialize) the risks associated with lending large sums of money for decades at fixed interest rates.

    Without this intervention, the 30-year mortgage would probably not be so ubiquitous. I mean, think about it. Would you want to lend someone hundreds of thousands of dollars for decades and freeze the amount they will pay you for providing them with that money? What if they lose their jobs or die? What if interest rates skyrocket and you can find much more favorable terms for lending out that money? And then, to boot, if interest rates fall, the borrower can just walk away from that loan and get a new mortgage at any time when economic conditions are more favorable to them? I mean, yikes. No thanks.

    A long time ago, Planet Money interviewed financial journalist Bethany McLean about 30-year fixed mortgages, and she described them as "a financial Frankenstein's monster" from the perspective of lenders.

    Without an important role for the government in backing these loans, "I don't think any rational bank would offer this product," says David Berger, an economist at Duke University.

    " You need the public sector to play an important role for really long duration mortgages to be viable in the financial system," says Joseph Gyourko, an economist at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School of Business.

    It helps explain why this sort of mortgage system is so rare in the world.

    The Pros of long-term, fixed-rate mortgages 

    There are some clear benefits of the weird mortgage system we have in the United States. One is lower monthly payments because homebuyers can pay off their loans over 30 years. Another is homebuyers are given an incredible ability to freeze their housing costs in stone and then refinance when it suits them.

    Several of the economists we spoke to had 30-year mortgages themselves, and they had refinanced when rates sank below 3 percent a few years ago. They were very nice people, but I hate them now. (I bought a house more recently and the mortgage rate is close to 7 percent).

    Anyways, the ability to freeze rates and then refinance later if the opportunity arises is clearly a huge benefit to homebuyers. It offers predictability on your housing costs. And, especially nice, a fixed-rate mortgage basically shields you from inflation and its accompanying higher interest rates. Everything else may get more expensive, but your housing payment actually falls in real terms when there's inflation!

    The Cons of long-term, fixed-rate mortgages

    That said, as we already alluded to, both 30-year and hypothetical 50-year mortgages come with costs: they tend to have higher interest rates than adjustable rate mortgages and you have a longer period upfront paying interest and not actually paying down your loan much.

    But there's more.

    If the housing market gets dicey and prices start plummeting, having a large outstanding loan at a fixed interest rate can create serious problems. Gyourko, the economist at Wharton, says long-term, fixed-rate mortgages increase the probability that you can go underwater on your home, a situation where you owe more on your house than it's worth.

    " The borrower on a really long duration loan — 30 or 50 — does not build equity very quickly at all," Gyourko says. " There's a risk that if there's a severe drop in house prices, you go underwater."

    Going underwater is a nightmare. If you sell, it means the money you get won't cover your debt. It gets much harder to refinance, meaning you're stuck with a higher interest rate than you could otherwise get in a situation where the housing market tanks.

    If you have a fixed-interest rate and the housing market tanks, "your house price goes down and you're kind of stuck," says Berger, the economist at Duke. "No one is gonna lend to you when you're underwater. If you had an adjustable rate, your rate would've just dropped automatically," and maybe that would help you make your housing payments and not lose your house.

    "And are you more likely or less likely to be laid off if house prices drop a lot? Answer: more likely," Gyourko says. "So you run that risk of those two events coinciding, and then you've lost a huge amount of your personal wealth."

    Depending on the state of the economy, the direction of interest rates, and your financial circumstances, it might not make sense to fix your interest rate. Actually, that may be the case right now. Interest rates spiked in 2022 and 2023 and have already started to come down, and many expect them to go down further, especially if the economy enters a recession.

    " Right now, I think it does make more sense for people to get an adjustable rate mortgage," Fairweather, the chief economist at Redfin, says.

    Adjustable-rate mortgages typically start with lower interest rates than fixed rate mortgages. Fairweather says you can think about the choice to buy a long-term, fixed-rate mortgage instead of an adjustable rate mortgage as effectively paying extra for insurance against future interest rate hikes. And, just like the standard advice for buying any other kind of insurance, "you don't really want to get insurance if you can afford to self-insure," she says. In other words, if you think you could afford the possibility that interest rates spike in the near future, it probably makes sense to get an adjustable rate mortgage.

    " So if you get the adjustable rate mortgage, what I would advise is to make sure you have some room in your budget left over for when the mortgage rate resets potentially at a higher level so that you're not hit with costs that you aren't able to pay," Fairweather says. "But if you could take that savings and you know, put it in your savings account, then you'll probably end up a-okay with an adjustable rate mortgage and actually save money compared to the fixed rate."

    Fixed-rate mortgages may distort our economy

    But there are other, economy-wide issues with having so many mortgage-holders with long-term fixed rates.

    One is that the government involvement in the housing market that makes our system of widespread 30-year mortgages possible can occasionally result in big problems for taxpayers, especially if regulators aren't vigilant in preventing shady loan practices. Just see what happened during the global financial crisis back in the late 2000s.

    "The worst possible situation is what happened in the global financial crisis when Fannie and Freddie were basically insolvent, were put on the treasury's balance sheet and to this day remain there," Gyourko says.

    Another problem with America's weird system of ubiquitous fixed-rate mortgages is that it may weaken the Fed's ability to juice the economy or lower inflation when needed (aka conduct monetary policy).

    That's because fixed-rate mortgage holders are shielded from interest rate changes. If everyone had an adjustable rate mortgage, the Fed could maybe more easily juice the economy by lowering people's monthly payments, nudging them to spend more in the economy. That said, if interest rates go low enough, it will induce many American homeowners to refinance, lower their payments, and potentially goad them to increase their spending and boost the economy.

    In inflationary times though, when the Fed needs to bring down spending in the economy, the Fed's job may be tougher and more distortionary to the economy. If everyone were on adjustable rates, the Fed could just raise rates and, boom, homeowners would probably start spending less and inflation would come down. But most American homeowners are shielded from rate increases, so it's new homebuyers — often younger people — who feel more of the pain. Some argue that's unfair.

    Speaking of unfairness, Harvard's John Campbell points out that maximizing your personal wealth in our weird mortgage system relies on considerable financial literacy, and populations that are poorer and less educated tend to be less financially literate. So this system results in greater inequality.

    "A lot of people don't know when to refinance and they just don't do it," Campbell says. "And there's some very troubling evidence that, in this country, black and Hispanic borrowers are much slower to refinance than white borrowers." The result, he says, is they tend to pay higher interest rates.

    There's another problem with our system: lock in. This has been talked about in recent years. There are tons of homeowners out there who now have rock-bottom interest rates on their mortgages — like, ahem, many of the very financially literate economists I spoke to — and they're reluctant to move.

    Lock-in may be one reason why American home prices have been stubbornly high over the past few years, even as interest rates have spiked. Other countries, where adjustable rate mortgages are more the norm, have seen their housing prices dip a lot more in recent years.

    " I think that their housing markets are more reactive to their overall economies," Fairweather says. "So in other places where there's more adjustable rate mortgages, when interest rates go up, that means that homeowners have a reason to sell because their payments are going up. And if they can't afford them or they don't want to pay them, then they'll put their homes on the market.  In our housing market, that doesn't happen. There is this unequal treatment between first time home buyers and existing homeowners. And it really benefits long-term homeowners."

    Even more, economists believe that the lock-in that fixed mortgages create is bad for the economy. Many people may be refusing jobs where they could be more productive because they don't want to move.

    The real fix for housing affordability

    So, yeah, many of the problems identified with the 50-year mortgage idea are also present with the 30-year mortgage.

    The real motivation for this idea is to enable more Americans to buy houses. With high prices and higher interest rates than a few years ago, many Americans are priced out.

    The economists we spoke to all stressed that this new financial product will not solve the fundamental problem of housing affordability. To do that, we need to start building a lot more homes. Some even said that by juicing demand with this new financial product and not increasing supply, this proposal could actually make housing prices go higher, contributing to the problem.

    "Proposals to help home buyers — whether it's this 50-year mortgage or whether it's Kamala Harris's proposal in her presidential campaign to give money to first time homebuyers — the main beneficiaries are actually the people selling houses," Campbell says. "Because given the supply, if you make it easier for buyers, they're bidding against each other for the same supply. The price is gonna go up. The winner is gonna be the person selling."

    So, yeah, we need to build more homes. But, in that world, maybe a 50-year mortgage would have some benefits for some people. Of course, they will need to know the facts about this financial product and make sure it's the right product for them.

    Berger, the economist at Duke, recommends that the government invest more in helping Americans become more financially literate about mortgages and provide better information about alternative financial options to the 30-year mortgage. This stuff is complicated!
    Copyright 2025 NPR

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  • CA senators demand PPE, greater smoke protections
    Two silhouettes of firefighters in gear facing a forest area on fire.
    Firefighters monitor a back fire as they battle the Medocino Complex Fire on August 7, 2018 near Lodoga, California.

    Topline:

    A bipartisan group of senators, including California Democrat Adam Schiff and Utah Republican John Curtis, introduced the first-ever respiratory protection standards for wildland firefighters on Monday.

    Why it matters: If Congress passes the bipartisan bill, it would ensure the U.S. Forest Service and the U.S. Department of the Interior “take long overdue steps to protect the health of these heroes,” the bill’s authors said in a press release. This legislation was co-sponsored by Sens. Alex Padilla (D-California) and Tim Sheehy (R-Montana).

    The backstory: For decades, firefighters facing some of the state’s most destructive wildfires worked without proper masks or respirators, despite evidence showing long-term health risks from wildfire smoke.

    Read on... for more about the bill.

    For decades, firefighters facing some of the state’s most destructive wildfires worked without proper masks or respirators, despite evidence showing long-term health risks from wildfire smoke.

    That’s why a bipartisan group of senators, including California Democrat Adam Schiff and Utah Republican John Curtis, introduced the first-ever respiratory protection standards for wildland firefighters on Monday.

    If Congress passes the bipartisan bill, it would ensure the U.S. Forest Service and the U.S. Department of the Interior “take long overdue steps to protect the health of these heroes,” the bill’s authors said in a press release. This legislation was co-sponsored by Sens. Alex Padilla (D-California) and Tim Sheehy (R-Montana).

    “Wildland firefighters deploy in the most extreme conditions to combat wildfires, preserve vital ecosystems, and save lives,” Padilla said in a press release. “These heroic men and women should not be forced to face long-term illness or premature death due to smoke exposure on the job.”

    For decades, the U.S. Forest Service banned firefighters from wearing masks, arguing that they were too unwieldy for the job. In September, the Forest Service posted new guidance, paving the way for the new legislation.

    Sen. Alex Padilla, a man with medium skin tone, wearing a blue suit and striped tie, speaks behind a podium in front of a building with a balcony.
    Sen. Alex Padilla speaks at a press briefing in San Francisco on June 1, 2021.
    (
    Beth LaBerge
    /
    KQED
    )

    Under the Healthy Lungs for Heroes Act, the agencies would work with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health to develop appropriate respiratory protections — masks and other devices — tailored to the unique needs of wildland firefighters when smoke exposure exceeds exposure limits.

    The lawmakers noted that wildland firefighters frequently work 16-hour shifts while traversing mountains, ash and debris — all while inhaling toxic smoke. They said there is a clear link between wildfire smoke and adverse health impacts, including multiple forms of cancer. Firefighters have a life expectancy that is around a decade shorter than that of the average adult due to lung damage.

    “Firefighters are heroes, and it’s critical that we do everything possible to ensure they’re protected from the health risks associated with wildfires,” Sen. Adam Schiff said in a press release.

    Joe Perez, a firefighter based out of Northern California, said he’s fought wildland fires like the Tubbs Fire in 2017 and others in the area.

    “My whole career, I’ve worn a bandana or sometimes a facial shroud, which was standard practice,” he said. “But fires are burning thousands of homes, the contents of the homes and vehicles, and you’re sitting in that smoke for weeks at a time.”

    Perez was on administrative leave for months in 2024 due to lung damage sustained in the years prior. A person he was dating at the time told him he needed to get checked out because she heard him wheezing, he said. “She could smell the burnt plastics and stuff coming out of my skin for days.”

    He now lives with reactive airway disease, which resembles asthma, because of all the smoke he’s breathed.

    Perez is part of a wildland firefighter respiratory protection working group with Cal/OSHA, and now fights fires while wearing a mask. He said additional protections could have reduced his exposure to dangerous smoke and chemicals, but the culture of firefighting would have made it tough to be the only one wearing a mask.

    “Whether I would have worn it is another question,” Perez said. “That’s the kind of cultural question that’s difficult.”

    Two firefighters spray flames in a forest on fire at night.
    Firefighters monitor a backfire as they battle the King Fire on September 17, 2014, in Fresh Pond, California.
    (
    Justin Sullivan
    /
    Getty Images
    )

    He thinks the aim of the legislation is a step in the right direction, but noted that while the agencies study the issue, firefighters will still have to deal with all the smoke without strong rules around masking.

    “If I get cancer or something else down the line, I can pretty much point to where it’s probably coming from,” Perez said of the risks firefighters take in breathing in smoke while on a blaze. “But if we can avoid making that sacrifice, especially when we’re in our later years and supposed to be enjoying our retirement and having grandkids and stuff, that feels like something that makes a lot of sense.”

    In the September rule change, the Forest Service acknowledged that masks and respirators can protect firefighters against the particles in wildfire smoke. They’re now allowed to use N95 respirators approved by federal workplace safety regulators.

    Respirators remain banned during arduous work, like digging trenches, to prevent overheating. Officials note that while N95 respirators filter out particles, they don’t protect against gases, vapors or all tiny solid particles, with no respirators on the market that filter out all inhalation hazards while also complying with federal regulations.

    Several firefighter associations, unions and organizations, including the nonprofit Grassroots Wildland Firefighters, endorse the bill.

    “For too long, the physical health and well-being of these responders has been ignored by their own agencies,” said Lucas Mayfield, president of the group.

    Mayfield added that “wildland firefighters’ lives literally depend on it.”

  • House could approve release today

    Topline:

    Republicans in the House could be on track today to approve the release of the Jeffrey Epstein files, a vote that follows President Donald Trump's unexpected blessing for a measure that has driven rancor through the party and its base.

    The backstory: The bipartisan effort, which has been led by Reps. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., and Ro Khanna, D-Calif., was long fought by Trump and Republican leadership from reaching the House floor. As recently as last week, White House officials met with Rep. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., about her support for releasing the files, but her position was unchanged after the meeting. Trump has also attacked Republicans for pushing the measure, including Massie and most recently Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga.

    What changed: Trump did an about face over the weekend as it became clear a vote in the House was likely to succeed, and said Republicans should approve the bill.

    Republicans in the House could be on track today to approve the release of the Jeffrey Epstein files, a vote that follows President Donald Trump's unexpected blessing for a measure that has driven rancor through the party and its base.

    The bipartisan effort, which has been led by Reps. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., and Ro Khanna, D-Calif., was long fought by Trump and Republican leadership from reaching the House floor. As recently as last week, White House officials met with Rep. Lauren Boebert, R-Colo., about her support for releasing the files, but her position was unchanged after the meeting.

    Trump has also attacked Republicans for pushing the measure, including Massie and most recently Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga.

    However, Trump did an about face over the weekend as it became clear a vote in the House was likely to succeed, and said Republicans should approve the bill.

    Marjorie Taylor Greene stands at a lectern with mics in front of a sign reading: Epstein Files Transparency Act.
    Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., speaks at a press conference alongside alleged victims of Jeffrey Epstein at the U.S. Capitol on September 3, 2025.
    (
    Bryan Dozier
    /
    AFP via Getty Images
    )

    On Monday, Trump told reporters at the White House that the Senate can take up the bill as well, and that he would sign it if it passes. The measure, if passed, would compel the Justice Department to release all of its files on the convicted sex offender within 30 days.

    "I'm all for it," Trump said from the Oval Office, but maintained it was a "hoax" that he didn't want to "detract" from his party's success.

    Trump does not need legislation in order to approve the files for release, but he told reporters that Congress "can do whatever they want" on the vote.

    His remarks came after a simple majority of House members signed onto what is known as a discharge petition – a workaround that forces votes without leadership or committee approval. Last week, the chamber's newest member, Rep. Adelita Grijalva, D-Ariz., became the decisive 218th signature on the petition.

    Donald Trump is seated at a desk in a suit. He's gesturing with both hands.
    President Trump speaks with reporters from the Oval Office on Monday. Trump said he would sign a bill to release the Epstein files if it passes through Congress.
    (
    Brendan Smialowski
    /
    AFP via Getty Images
    )

    Grijalva's swearing in was delayed for seven weeks after her election, galvanizing Democrats who accused House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., of stalling in order to put off the vote. Johnson rejected that claim, saying her oath of office would not be taken until the government shutdown fight was resolved. He also committed to not block the vote on the House floor.

    Tuesday's expected vote also comes after a wave of Epstein files were released last week by members on the Republican-led House Oversight Committee. Democrats first released a set of three emails, followed by thousands of pages of new files released by the panel's chairman, James Comer, R-Ky. The documents triggered new questions about the extent of Trump's relationship with the disgraced financier and convicted sex offender before his death in 2019.

    Ahead of the vote, Massie and Khanna plan to gather with survivors and their families and friends. They last appeared together in September on Capitol Hill to lobby for the release of the Epstein files, saying transparency was the path to holding those involved fully accountable.

    Survivors reiterated that position in a Friday letter to Congress in which they urged the release of files relating to Epstein and his longtime confidante Ghislaine Maxwell, who is currently serving time at a Texas facility after her conviction on trafficking charges.

    "Epstein and Maxwell's crimes exposed a double standard of justice, where rich and powerful men and women evade repercussions," they wrote.
    Copyright 2025 NPR

  • Wholesale prices have jumped 40% from a year ago

    Topline:

    Americans will likely face higher prices on items for their Thanksgiving dinners this year.

    Why now: Wholesale prices for a turkey have jumped 40% from a year ago.

    Shopping advice: One food economist says: "It really pays off to plan ahead and create a shopping list, making sure you're sticking to it and avoiding impulse purchases."

    Americans will likely face higher prices on items for their Thanksgiving dinners this year.

    Turkey, typically the centerpiece of the Thanksgiving meal, will be one of the biggest sticker shocks for consumers. Wholesale prices for a turkey have jumped 40% from a year ago, according to the Department of Agriculture. Outbreaks of avian influenza, or bird flu, and increased demand have contributed to these higher prices.

    Those opting for beef instead of turkey should also prepare to pay more. Beef prices are nearly 15% higher than they were last year, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

    Canned vegetables are 5% more expensive compared to last year, due to higher packaging costs from the steel and aluminum tariffs the Trump administration put in place earlier this year.

    President Trump announced Friday that he would be rolling back tariffs he imposed on beef, coffee, tropical fruits and other commodities, in an effort to combat high prices at grocery stores.

    David Ortega, a professor and food economist at Michigan State University, said those rollbacks won't lower prices completely, as tariffs aren't the only cause of increasing prices.

    "By removing the tariffs, what we're doing is we're slowing down the increase in the price of many of these goods," Ortega said. "So while we may not see prices go down for the holidays, it helps in terms of moderating the price increases that we've been accustomed to at the grocery store."

    Some grocery items have seen some price decreases in time for the holiday season. Egg prices have seen a decline from earlier this year, and domestic wine prices are down about 1.2% from last year due to a steady supply and softening demand.

    Ortega says buying fresh produce rather than canned fruits or vegetables is one way consumers can avoid higher prices from aluminum packaging. He also recommends shoppers plan their meals out in advance, look for private label or store brands over name brands, and shop early for certain items to take advantage of sales or promotions grocery stores might have.

    "It really pays off to plan ahead and create a shopping list, making sure you're sticking to it and avoiding impulse purchases," Ortega said.
    Copyright 2025 NPR